Parenting: How do we make this thrilling roller coaster ride a little bit easier?
July, 27, 2021
Glennon Doyle:
Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. Thanks for showing up. Today we’re talking about parenting. So a lot of you know my story how I became a parent. 19 years ago I found myself on a cold bathroom floor holding a positive pregnancy test, shaking from terror and a vicious hangover. I was so broken, so alone. I’d been an addict for a decade-and-a-half at that point. And as addicts often do, I burned every bridge in my life. I just remember thinking there could not be any worse candidate for motherhood on earth than me. And yet I so badly wanted to become this one’s mother.
It was the first thing I ever wanted more than I wanted to be numb. And I stayed numb because being human just felt to brittle to survive. It all, all of it just hurt too much. But that day staring at that test I realized that there was beauty to be had, too. And that if I wanted this beautiful thing called motherhood, I was going to have to accept the brutal, too, that life was brutiful, both or nothing. So that day I got sober. I decided to open myself up to love, to annihilation to come back to brutiful life. My son, Chase, was born eight months later. He is the boy who brought me into the world.
When Chase was a toddler, Craig lost his job and I was teaching, but money was tight. So we moved back in with my parents, to my childhood home just as the 17-year cicadas arrived in Virginia. If you have not experienced the cicadas’ arrival, it’s as if you wake up one morning and the entire world is covered in a layer of black and the air is filled with a sharp screeching sound like a constant alarm. I was terrified. Chase was enchanted.
He begged to go for walks, and he’d stop every three seconds and bend over and pick up a cicada and pet it with his eyes wide and all lit up. And I would walk beside him with my smile frozen on my face trying to keep my hand steady so I could hold his. I was just desperately trying to hide my fear because I didn’t want him to catch it, because I wanted him to love the world, to live in awe of the world instead of in fear of it. I just wanted him to live less afraid than I did.
When Chase was three his sister was born, and then when he was five, his other sister was born, and all beautiful hell broke loose. Those days of three little ones at home were the most holy and hardest of my life. Every day was far too much and not even close to enough. I was somehow constantly both completely overwhelmed and thoroughly underwhelmed at the same time. I so loved being needed, and yet I was over saturated by touch and other people’s needs. And every day was a lonely eternity.
And then this very weird thing kept happening back then. I’d be in Target, dripping with the children just trying to buy diapers and get the hell out of there, and I’d be in the checkout line and a kind-looking older woman would stop her cart and look at us for a long moment. And then while the kids were screaming for candy and climbing on my head like monkeys and I was panic-sweating, she’d say to me, “Oh, honey. These are the best days of your life. It goes by so fast. Enjoy every moment.”
And I tried to smile and say, “Thank you,” but my heart would drop every time. There was something about that that made me feel so guilty because those days, those early days, they didn’t feel like they were going by fast. They felt like eternal groundhog days, many of which I found myself crying alone in the bathroom.
And so, it always made me feel like, great, so not only am I clearly doing this all wrong, but now I’m somehow missing the best years of my life? These are the best years of my life? And is it not enough to just try to be a decent mother, but now I also have to make sure I’m enjoying every sweaty moment? I vowed if I made it to Chase’s adulthood, I would never be those ladies in Target. I’d remember how hard it all was. I’d remember the beautiful excruciating reality of parenting young kids. I’d remember that parenting young kids is like climbing Mount Everest. You don’t have to smile or enjoy every moment of the climb. You just got to stay hydrated and keep climbing.
I remember one afternoon, watching two-year-old Chase pet one of those God-awful cicadas with his chubby dimpled hand and thinking, “Whoa, the next time these cicadas come, he’ll be 18. My little boy will be 18 years old.” And I remember that felt like a fairy tale, no way. We will be this forever.
So, the cicadas are back. Last week Chase graduated from high school. His hands are no longer dimpled and chubby. He has the elegant hands of a writer, often dirty from tending to his many plants. He’s a creator and a nurturer. He is in awe of the world he is about to go out into. He is less afraid that I am. It went by so fast.
Parenting is like a roller coaster. The first decade is so slow, every day climbing that hill just tick, tick, tick. And then you’re at the top of the hill, it’s the crest, it’s maybe around 10 years old. And then we’re all done, down the hill, the car jerks and you’re in the station and you look up and they’re walking out.
Chase and I had been roller coaster partners since that day on the bathroom floor when he invited me back to life. And the car has stopped now. He’s climbing out of our cozy car and walking away, and I’m still in the car watching him go. And you probably assume that now is when I tell you how we’re supposed to deal with this gorgeous, lucky heartbreak. And you would assume wrong. I don’t know. I’m Elsa this month. I have frozen my heart so I don’t die from feeling all of this. And I know I’m the one who told you to feel it all, but what can I say? I’m a human. I contain multitudes.
But here’s something I can do. There are many of you listening who are just starting this ride, who are parents of little ones who still woke up this morning too early to dimpled little hands in your faces and morning cartoons. You’re just climbing onto the roller coaster, just getting strapped in. And those eternal early days crying in the bathroom occasionally, maybe? Every time I see you in the Target lines, kids screaming and melting down and climbing on your heads like monkeys, I send you love and strength and solidarity. I never tell you to enjoy every moment.
But if we had time there are a few things I’d tell you, like it gets better. There are far better times than these coming. Like, you will get your life back, you’re still in there and other things I wish I’d known during those early days. So I’m going to tell you some of those things now. Let’s begin.
I’m excited for this conversation today. I don’t know exactly where it’ll go, but I do know that I have three kids who are, let’s see, their ages change every year and there’s three of them, so it’s really hard to know this, but one is 18, one is 16-
AD:
15, 15.
GD:
Oh shit, okay. Let me start over. Chase is 18, Tish is 15, and Amma is 13. Nailed it, okay. And then, sister, you have?
AD:
I have Bobby who is turning nine in next month.
GD:
Crazy.
AD:
And Alice who is turning seven next month.
GD:
So have a very different… we’re in different phases, really different phases. And so I think it’s going to be fun to talk to you about these things. So, I just, in preparation for this conversation, I just was thinking of what five things would I tell young moms or dads about parenting little ones. And it’s funny when I look over these, I realize none of them are about kids. Like, none of them are about how to make your kids smarter or better or whatever. They’re all just for the parents who I feel like need more support and, and goodness and kindness and grace than even the children do. So they’re really just about how to do the hard thing of parenting and make it a little bit easier, I think.
AD:
Well, that’s, that’s golden. You’re going to talk about how to do the hard thing of parenting and make it easier?
GD:
I think so.
AD:
This should be the most popular episode.
GD:
We’ll see. The first thing I kept thinking about, I was on my walks, you know, I take a walk every day. My quiet time, it’s my be-still time where I just listen to myself. And, um, I kept thinking of this idea that when I first became a parent I thought that I had to be what I would call this perfect parent, which basically just means it was like this parent who never showed any weakness or never lost their temper or never… Just was like, um, an android basically. You know, was always perfectly even-tempered and never got sad and never got tired and was just this Stepford parent, right? And every time-
AD:
You mean droid, sister? You mean a droid?
GD:
Well, what’s an android? What’s a-
AD:
An android is like the opposite of an iPhone. Well, you could’ve been like an android, too. That would’ve been fine.
GD:
Okay. So, whatever is a robot.
AD:
Yes, droid.
GD:
Whatever word means robot.
AD:
These are not the droids you’re looking for.
GD:
Okay, okay. A droid. So, I don’t know, I just feel like we got that… this kind of memo my parenting generation that was just like, here is this version of parenthood, and this mother is always calm and always smiling and always loving and always giving and was an Energizer Bunny and never lost it and didn’t have any human needs and just kind of ceased to exist and, and, um, I guess just wasn’t human anymore.
You know, that once you became a mother you weren’t going to be human anymore. And at some point I realized, oh, wait, but I’m raising people who are fully human.
So, isn’t the job of parenthood not to be perfect or this robot version of human, but actually to show with your being and your life and how you deal with shit, showing your kids how to deal gracefully with being fully human, right?
Because at some point these kids are going to wake up one day and understand that they’re fully human, they’re going to have anger, they’re going to have rage, they’re going to have doubt, they’re going to get tired, they’re going to screw up, they’re going to… And if we haven’t shown them how to do that out loud, they’re going to feel shame and alone. So it’s like they might feel great about us if we’re trying to be perfect people for them. They might be like, “Oh, my mom’s perfect,” but they’re going to feel like crap about themselves when they realize that they, in fact, are fully human.
AD:
Yes, not prepared. It’s like we think… It’s like when we get this baby we think of it like a little mound of clay and we’re potters that it’s spinning around and around. And we think if we, if we mess it up, if we do anything, if we, if we make any wrong moves, we’re going to, like, indent the clay or we’re going to. And then they’ll just have that forever and we’ve ruined the thing that came to us perfect.
GD:
Yes.
AD:
But, but it’s not clay, it’s a person.
GD:
Yeah, exactly.
AD:
That’s a better, that’s a better way of looking at it.
GD:
Great.
AD:
But I… that’s how I always feel. I’m always like, “Well, that’s going to be with him for a minute or forever.”
GD:
Yeah, it’s like we are…we think we’re potters shaping clay. And so, my brilliant, genius, expert parenting advice is to tell parents they’re not clay, they’re humans. It’s like 100% they’re human beings. So they’re going to feel all the things. They’re going to make huge mistakes. They’re going to, like, try and fail their… All the things that you feel everyday, they are going to feel everyday. So why not let them see you mess up. Let them see you apologize. Let them see you cry. Let them see you lose it every once in a while and apologize. Like, all of that is okay, right? It’s actually maybe a relief to a kid to feel her insides and understand that her parent also has those same insides. And isn’t hiding any of it, so they, in fact, don’t have to hide any of who they are.
AD:
Yeah. Yeah.
GD:
It’s all okay. I mean, I screw up so much and apologize so often that, I think I told you this, last week… So Chase, he’s 18 now, I think we’ve established. I did something dumb ass, I don’t know, I lost my temper or something. He was in his room later and I was just walking up the stairs and I didn’t even get to his room yet, and he yelled out the room, “It’s okay, mom. It’s okay. It’s cool, we’re good.”
AD:
He’s like, “Are we going to have to talk about it again?”
GD:
Yeah, like they know the pattern, like, here she comes. She’s going to apologize, it’s a… I don’t know. I just think Abby and I had a moment early on where she wanted to apologize to Amma and she didn’t know we could do that, because she didn’t have parents who did that. Like, that you’re supposed to be invulnerable. You are supposed to… I was like, “I’m gonna do it. Like, that’s the good stuff.”
AD:
It’s so true because so many people of our generation grew up in this way. It’s almost like if you were to say, like, somehow your authority or parenthood is derived from this, “What I say is true and what I do is gospel,” that we think that we’re somehow undermining that very precarious role, because none of us know what the hell we’re doing. So, it’s like we’re trying to pretend we know what we’re doing so much that if we ever admit we didn’t know what we were doing, that it’s like a house of cards and it all falls down.
GD:
Yeah, it’s it, that’s it. Because if that’s the… if that’s what you have in your mind that a parent should be, you will live that way, right? But what if a parent is just someone who’s walking, you know, in front of this other human just a little bit further down the road just trying to show them how to forgive yourself for being human and treat other people and yourself with some kindness and decency? I just… that’s what I would, if I could start over, it wouldn’t be knowing I didn’t have to become this robot of a person that was the opposite of my job. That I was just supposed to be walking in a way that I would want them to watch. I was trying to human well, but still not denying any of my humanity in front of them.
AD:
So, they’re not clay, they’re human. And also you are human-
GD:
Yes.
AD:
… so act like a human.
GD:
Yes, okay. So that is our first piece of earth-shattering advice. You are, in fact, human. The child’s human. Keep humaning. Okay, great.
The second one is this: So I figured out early on that after trying to read 17,000 parents books that… Wait, okay. I’m going to not… I’m going to stop trying to be like a better parent, and I’m going to just like start trying to be a better person and let them watch me. Like, that was like a big shift for me. Except that there was this one woman that I loved when I was raising the little ones. Her name’s Susan Stiffelman. I’ve loved her books and she’s just the best. And, I remember having a conversation with her one time. This is the second little hot tip. And she, she was a child therapist and also a teacher of things. And she told me that a funny thing about being a family therapist is it’s almost always the case that if a parent is coming in to try to learn how to understand their kid better or fix a problem or whatever, that it’s almost always the case that they’re fine anyway. That she’s never worried about those kids, because-
AD:
Oh.
GD:
… if you are a parent who is the kind of the person who will be humble and realize that there are some things you don’t know and reach out for help in any way, whether it’s through a therapist if you have that kind of privilege and money. If whether it’s through a book. Whether it’s through a chatroom. Like, if you are the kind of parent who’s actually actively trying and questioning and thinking, then almost by default the… she knows you’re fine. If you’re asking for help, it’s almost like you don’t need it, right?
AD:
Well, that’s a fricking relief.
GD:
Yes, yes. So-
AD:
Should I be worried that I never read a parenting book?
GD:
Um-
AD:
Maybe I’m the one that … maybe I’m in the Susan Stiffelman bullseye.
GD:
You should be worried. So like if you’re not worried, you should be worried. And if you are worried, you should not be worried. Second hot tip, okay? No, but I will never forget that she said to me what kids need at the end of the day is one steady role model, okay? So like all of these people, there has to be two parents in the house. There has to be whatever. That’s actually not true. There needs to be one steady, dependable role model.
And the second thing is that the role models for a child need to be open to getting help when it’s needed. Meaning help can just be information. Help can be conversations with other parents. But this idea of openness that, like, relating to small people is a lifelong journey and you might need more than just your own ideas. Because we were all raised in particular families, in particular family cultures. And if we don’t open ourselves up to other ideas, we might only be passing down what we’ve learned.
AD:
That’s good.
GD:
Yeah, yeah. So the third thing… so that second hot tip was be open to other ideas and other help.
AD:
And if you’re already out there seeking resources and trying to broaden your understanding of what you should be doing, then you’re probably already all set.
GD:
Yeah, if you’re listening to this podcast, if you’ve made it this far, that means you’re the type of person…if you’re the type of person to constantly wonder “Am I a good enough parent? Am I a good enough parent?” Yes, you are. The people who are not good enough parents have never considered that possibility.
AD:
Yeah.
GD:
Okay. So fourth… Are we on three or four?
AD:
We’re on three.
GD:
Oh damn it. Okay. All right. This is the third one and I will tell you that I didn’t figure this one out until maybe child two or three. Okay. I used to think of parenting as this… it was like the kid was born and then you have this list of, like, goals, like an expectation list. Things like a dream situation would be. Like, this kid would be this and this and this and this and this. And then when they’re a teenager they’d be this and this. And then when they’re an adult they’d be this and this and this. And that my job was to get them from this ball of clay to this checklist of expectations.
AD:
Right.
GD:
Right?
AD:
Right.
GD:
And then after a while, well, after parenting humans, also talking to friends who’ve parenting humans, watching how this thing works, you realize that it’s never ever how this gig goes. Ever. That no one on earth really has ever gotten the kid that they thought they were going to get, right? That there’s this other way of parenting that, that throws away that sheet completely. There’s no sheet, right? And instead of expectation parenting, it’s like a treasure hunt parenting. It’s like you come to them with basically a blank slate and you have all of your ideas about how to be a decent human being… that’s not what I’m saying, but in terms of who they are and who they will be, it is not your job to make them what your idea is of who they should be. It is only your job to discover, to spend your entire parenting life as a treasure hunt. Just trying to create the sort of loving and open environment where that child feels safe to constantly tell you who they already are.
AD:
So what’s an example of that?
GD:
Well, okay. So, you know, this… but Tish came home one day a couple years ago, a few years ago, and she said, “So Chase wants me to join all of these clubs in school, and I don’t want to. I don’t want to join these clubs. I’m not, like, a club person.” So I said, “Okay, well, then what’s the big deal? Just don’t join the clubs.” And she said, “Well, mom, I don’t want to disappoint him,” and I said to her, “Oh, honey, your job throughout your entire life is to disappoint as many people as it takes so that you never disappoint yourself.” And she said, “Even you?” And I said, “Oh, especially me.” Because so many of us are living… I mean, I have friends who are fierce, you know, leaders and activists and people out there in the world, and still at the end of the day they come home and they’re really living their lives to not disappoint their parents. And you know, maybe their parents have been dead for 20 years, doesn’t matter, right? That is the ultimate taming, this idea that we have to live not to disappoint our parents. And I was talking to Liz Gilbert about this a while back and she said, she told me to think hard about the word “disappoint,” because even in the word it’s like if you’re scared of disappointing your parent, that means you have already appointed them the guide of your life.
AD:
Right. Disappoint is unappointing-
GD:
Yes.
AD:
… and reappointing yourself.
GD:
Yes. That’s what I want the kids to do. I don’t want them to live as me as their guide, right? I want to teach them to trust themselves to guide their own lives. And so if disappointing is like an active thing… Because in that scenario, Tish was actually considering disappointing herself. Somebody was going to get disappointed in that scenario. If she joined the club, she was going to be disappointing herself. If she did not join the club, she was going to be disappointing Chase. So I don’t know, as a parent I just want them to always know that their job is to unappoint everybody else as the guide of their life and, and trust themselves.
AD:
This one is so… That’s so true because you want them to live true. You want them to find what their particular version of success and joy and fulfillment is and not just be like “Okay, if I go to this school, if I get these grades…” But there’s so many layers to that that make it so much harder, because there’s, obviously, you know, if I told Bobby, “Disappoint me. Only do what you want to do.” He’d be like, “That’s cool. I’m going to be, um, playing Fortnite for eight hours because I have appointed myself and that’s what I want to do.”
So, there’s the lower level of that, right? And then there’s this kind of higher level which is: We just so desperately want them to have the best things and we want them to be whatever route helped us, we want to be able to give to them. And so, you only have the tools that you have. Like, you only have the experience that you had. So, if playing sports was your way of connecting to people in the world and getting self-confidence, you super want them to play sports because that was so helpful to you. And then it is confusing and hard when you have-
GD:
A kid who’s a poet and wants to stay in their room all day-
AD:
Right.
GD:
… and is a super-sensitive artist. Right.
AD:
And then there’s this higher level of that which is a very different than I think what you’re talking about was when you have kids with special needs. When they have, you know, different brain structure and we’re learning about that in our family. And there is a certain amount… You actually do have to go through the process of grieving what… It’s not a disappointment because you love your kid exactly as they are, but there is a grief of, of a certain way that was always your assumption that it would be. And then you do have to go through that. You can’t shame yourself of saying, you know, “Shame on you for being disappointed,” or whatever it is.
GD:
Right.
AD:
I think it’s a process. And then… But I think eventually then when you reframe it in the way that you’re saying and you just say like the treasure hunt, every one of those flip sides of that letting go of what you thought it would be does really come with this incredible… When you can look at them not through that frame of what they’re missing but look at what they’re bringing that you never thought would be part of your life. It really is a powerful thing.
GD:
Yeah.
AD:
And you can see them. You can actually see them. When you’re not seeing what’s not there, you can actually see what’s there.
GD:
Yes. Yes. It’s like that idea, like, don’t become with so obsessed with raising the perfect kid that you forget you already have that. Right? Yeah, that’s really interesting. It’s like also that idea of just fiercely seeing your child for they are and and expecting the world to adjust to who that child is instead of for that child to adjust to the world’s expectations of them. It feels like a personally powerful way to parent, but it’s also kind of a way of reshaping the world. Because the more parents who just allow their kids to be exactly who they are instead of conforming, then that gives other parents permission to do it, and it’s like this ripple thing. Like, you can… we could actually change the rigidity of how people are allowed to show up in the world if we stopped making our children conform.
AD:
And that starts it with you. Like, in your heart as their mom, if you, you have to first say I truly believe you are okay. I truly believe that you are exactly what you need to be, and, and, you know, ’cause you can’t just say that about the world if you haven’t first shifted that yourself.
GD:
Right. Or you just keep saying it and keep trying to believe it and then I almost, almost disagree.
AD:
Okay.
GD:
Like I almost feel like I never truly believe the shit that I s-… believe. Like, I’m always, like, at the same time practicing it and saying I believe it and doubting myself and still doing it. It’s like an everyday… Do you know what I mean?
AD:
Mm-hmm. Yes, I do. Yes, I do. You’re like, “I believe that I can swim. I can believe that I can swim.”
GD:
Yes, exactly.
AD:
As you go and you’re like, “Look at me, I’m not drowning.”
GD:
Yes. Like, love wins, love wins. Does love win? Love wins, right?
AD:
Yeah.
GD:
Love wins?
AD:
Yeah. Right.
GD:
So, love wins?
Okay. So the next one: We’re now on to number four. Okay. This is this idea that we might have to do a whole episode on this actually, but it’s this idea-
AD:
I think we should do an episode also on the letting go of, of embracing the child you have-
GD:
Yes.
AD:
… as opposed to the child that you expected-
GD:
Yes.
AD:
… you’re supposed to have.
GD:
Agree, agree. Okay. So number four it’s about pain and kids’ pain. I have… I think because we as human beings don’t trust pain, we are taught as a culture that we should just… that, like, there are a few feelings that are okay to have, which are all the comfortable feelings like happiness and gratitude and all that. And that any painful feelings are failures, that we should just not admit we have or deflect or numb. Then that’s what we pass on to our kids, those ideas about pain.
And this was part of our parenting memo from my generation. It was like “Your job as a parent is to never let your kid feel any pain. To fix their sadness, to protect them from, you know, discomfort, to never let anyone be mean to them, to never let them fail.” Just like-
AD:
The clay will melt.
GD:
…Yes. The clay will melt. Or, like, it was like in eighth grade I remember we had to do this parenting experiment or something-
AD:
It was the “don’t get pregnant scare tactic.”
GD:
…Yes. Yes, they tried to scare us by giving us an egg. It was like, if you can keep this egg not cracked for a week… I don’t know, but I had to carry this fricking egg around. I was terrified all the time that this egg was going to break. And that is literally how we parent, like the egg experiment in real life. Like, they give this human and we’re just panicking like what I do not to break it? Because successful parenting is if I return this egg unbroken, right? But once again, listener, you came here to hear the earth-shattering revelation that your child is neither clay nor an egg. Okay?
So, I’ll never forget being at this parenting convention and this woman stood up and she was amazing and she started crying and she said, “Glennon, my family is broken and there’s nothing I can do to fix it. And every day I look at my son and he’s in so much pain, and all I can think of is, it was my one job to protect you from pain, and I couldn’t do it. And I’m such a failure, I feel like such a failure.”
And all of the other parents are just like nodding and nodding. First of all, they’re at a parenting convention so we know they’re fine, their kids of fine.
AD:
See number two. Susan says you’re all good.
GD:
Right. Probably just best to relax. But anyway so I said to her… It was this moment of understanding, like, what… the problem is not that our kids have pain, the problem is that we have the wrong memo of what parenting is. She said, “It was my one job to protect them from pain,” that’s why she felt like a failure. But actually when you think hard about what kind of people, humans, we’re trying to raise, right? Everybody says I want to raise somebody who’s kind. I want to raise somebody who’s wise. I want to raise somebody who’s resilient, right? It’s always some version of those three.
And when you think hard about what is it in a human life that creates wisdom and kindness and resilience? It’s pain. It’s the struggle, right? It’s not not having anything to overcome. It’s overcoming and overcoming and overcoming, right? That’s what builds… Kids… People who are kind are people who have felt the sting of unkindness and don’t want to pass it on, right? People who are resilient are people who have screwed up and failed and gotten back up and saw that that doesn’t kill you, right? And people who are wise have sat in the ickiness of making mistakes and being human and gleaned, you know, the gold that comes from that.
So, it’s just this idea, number four, which is it is not our job nor our right to protect our kids from their pain. It’s our job to just actually let them sit in it, sit beside them through it, just say to them over and over again, like, “I see your fear and it’s big, but I see your courage and it’s bigger. You can do hard things.” We can do hard things ’cause that’s the dream, that when we’re gone, they aren’t these people who are just constantly avoiding every fire of life, because we’ve taught them, they can’t handle it. That they know that they are fireproof because they’ve walked through so many fires and they’re still standing.
AD:
Mm-hmm. And just that the…that’s exactly right, and the being with them in it, I mean, that’s all of it. And not being I’m so afraid of your pain that I’m scared to talk to you about it. That I’m scared that this has broken you. I’m just gonna ignore it because it’s too overwhelming for me. I mean, I think any pain if you know that the person who loves you most is sitting with you in it-
GD:
It’s the best we can do. That’s the best we can do. I love that, so it’s looking at it with them. Right? Sitting, sitting in it with them. I love that. Okay. Last one which I feel like we kind of… you already kind of nailed, but this one’s going to be tricky for me to explain. I was trying to think of how I want to say it on my walk. But I… Okay. I feel like we create stories about our children, okay?
AD:
Mm-hmm.
GD:
We create these stories in our mind about who our children are. I should say I have. I have done this. Oh, Chase is the this one. Amma’s the this one. Tish is the sensitive one. Amma’s the sporty one. Like, we create these stories about who they are. And I think more than anything what I’ve learned now that the kids are older, is that the story of who I’ve said they are have kept me from seeing who they actually are. That they’re, you know… Okay, quick example, you know, when Abby and Craig wanted Tish to try out for this like elite, elite soccer team, and I was like, “Tish cannot do that. Like, Tish, she was struggling, she was having a hard time. She’s super-sensitive, she’s… No, she can’t do that. That’s not… this is the wrong time.” I have this story about who she was and what she could handle. Thankfully, I deferred at that point to Abby and Craig. She crushed it. It’s one of the things that has saved her during these last four years. That story I had about her was not true, right?
And the story we have about them even though… even when it’s positive, is dangerous, right? So, oh, you’re the artistic one. Really? So now I’m in that cage for the rest of my life. Now I think that’s my parents’ expectation so I’m constantly trying to live up to that, right? Or I’m the sensitive one. May parents say I’m the sensitive one, so that means my sister’s not sensitive, first of all. And that means that I can’t handle life, right? It’s like their issue is never… What I’ve learned about my kids is that their issue, it’s not theirs. It’s like the story I have about their issue is their issue, right?
AD:
Mm-hmm.
GD:
So it’s kind of like if I could tell a parent that parenting at the end of the day is just about seeing them each day. When you’re staring at them because you have this story about them, you don’t see them, right? It’s like every story we have about kids is a cage, and there’s this idea in Buddhism called beginner’s mind, that we actually can only see a situation or an idea or a person when we come to them with absolute freshness, right? When we let go of all of the stories we have about them, and they walk into a room and we’re like, oh, there you are, fresh to me in this moment.
And so, and you know that old very famous, um, quote from, I believe it was Toni Morrison who said, “That all a child needs is for when they walk into a room to see their parents light up, their parents eyes light up.” Like, if at the end of the day if we can just look at our kids with bright, lit up eyes, freshly.
AD:
Yes. Yes, yes, yes, yes. I love that. To delight in them, to delight.
GD:
Yeah.
AD:
And that, I love that, too, because that quote I think about it all the time because it’s just when they walk in the room. And I think about it. I’m like-
GD:
Yes. Oh totally.
AD:
…you get home from school, and you walk in the door and I’m like, “How was your day? I love you. I missed you.”
GD:
And that’s it. Okay. That’s it. That’s all they get.
AD:
But it’s… it doesn’t… she doesn’t say all a child needs is three hours on the floor of delighting in them. She said when they walk in the room.
GD:
Hell no. That’s right. That’s right. And by the way, if you need to walk out right away, just flash them some love and light and get the hell out of there.
AD:
It’s so true. That thing that you said about labeling them is so important because I always wonder, are we doing that for our needs? Are we like… We have a checklist of things we require among our cohort. And so, we’re like, “Well, you’re going to be the sporty one because I need to have a sporty kid. You’re going to be the smart one. You’re going to be the… “ and we carry those. I recently was with a therapist. I have just always thought that I’m zero percent sensitive, always, my whole life.
GD:
Oh, sister. Oh, sister.
AD:
I, like with all honesty, I am not sensitive. And I think, I’m wondering, it’s because you were always the sensitive one.
GD:
That’s right.
AD:
And… but turns out, shock of the century for me truly was shocked, that I might be sensitive. At first, I was like, let me see your credentials. I don’t know about this.
GD:
Sister, oh.
AD:
But yet those stories are true.
GD:
Yes.
AD:
And even the things we… It’s like when you say in Untamed “be careful the stories you tell about yourself.”
GD:
That’s right.
AD:
When I’m talking about us, even, I’m like, well, she’s the creative one, I’m the analytical one. And that’s an insult to both of us.
GD:
That’s right. I don’t feel it as insulting. I feel it as it’s true for me. I am not analytical, but I will tell you that that’s a conversation that Abby and I have been having. That like you are so creative. You are so… I mean, it’s just interesting. Okay. That’s for another…
Also, I just want to add that mom has always told me that I was a good singer and dancer. You know that, right? She’s like, “Glennon has such a good voice. Like, Glennon, she can dance. She’s the one who dances.” Do you… were you in the room? I thought it was at Christmas when I was dancing and you and Abby just were like, “No, you can’t. This is terrible.” I was stunned. I was stunned.
AD:
So we have to be careful of the stories both ways. We can really-
GD:
Yeah, don’t lie.
AD:
… lead, we can lead our children into a life of delusion.
GD:
Don’t lie to them, God. Okay. We love you. Let’s come back with some hard Qs.
Okay. We’re back with some hard Qs. Let’s go to a write-in question, which, actually, maybe we got some version of this question 49 million times, which is: How do you handle the sleep deprivation of being a parent with young children?
AD:
What are they talking about? I don’t-
GD:
Y’all, Sister has not slept for eight years. She has rough sleepers, non-sleepers, people who don’t believe in sleep.
AD:
They’re doing their best to disappoint me.
GD:
Yes.
AD:
So they don’t disappoint themselves.
GD:
And bless their hearts they disappoint you every damn night, don’t they, sister?
AD:
Mm-hmm.
GD:
Um, listen. You don’t handle sleep deprivation. You barely survive sleep deprivation. I mean, I’ll never forget talking to this person who was training for some crazy military situation, okay? And this person, I don’t know if this is like top secret or I’m not supposed to talk about it, whatever. I didn’t sign anything. So in order to… This person was being trained by a government to withstand torture if this person got caught by an enemy, okay?
Now I need you to understand that what they did to train this soldier to resist torture or to survive torture without caving, was that they put this person in a room with just walls, and then they played over a loudspeaker a baby crying, or maybe it was a toddler because the toddler would cry, scream, and then yell, “Mommy, mommy.” That was the torture, okay, that broke most of these highly-trained soldiers, okay?
AD:
And then they’d wake ’em up. They wouldn’t… every time they went to sleep they’d wake ’em up.
GD:
Yes.
AD:
So they kept them, uh, yeah. I remember that.
GD:
Yeah. So, how do I explain this to you? The reason why you feel like you’re being tortured is because you are actually being tortured, okay? But unlike these soldier people, you don’t get to cave. You don’t get to… You just have to day after day survive being actually psychologically and physically tortured. That’s why you feel crazy, okay?
AD:
Yeah.
GD:
You’re not crazy. You’re just a goddam parent.
AD:
So, we’re basically all special forces is what you’re saying.
GD:
Yes. You’re a freaking, freaking hero, a global hero.
Okay. Our last question is from Christina.
Christina:
I’m wondering, Glennon, what are some tips that you have for moms who are going through the worry of kids growing old too fast? For example, I have a 13- and a 14-year-old and on the daily I count to myself how many years I have before they’re leaving. And that brings me just immense sadness to think about them leaving. So I’m looking for some ways to kind of comfort myself maybe, or just make sure that I’m maximizing the time that I have with them so I don’t look back on these four and three years just in abundance of regret. I don’t know if that’s a real question, maybe just help with the transition. I know you’re going through it, too. Thank you so much. I think you’re doing a great job.
GD:
Christina. She’s counting years. Oh, I know this feeling. I know this feeling and how do we maximize the years and how do we enjoy it so much that we never have regret? So, Christina, I’m going to read to you, just for you, Christina, part of an essay that I wrote years ago called Don’t Carpe Diem, okay? Really this essay is how I became a writer, right? This is the essay that went viral all over the place and kind of how this shebang got started. And it’s about those women at Target who looked at me and told me it goes by so fast. Okay, so this is for you, Christina.
“My point is this: I used to worry that not only was I failing to do a good enough job at parenting, but that I wasn’t enjoying it enough. Double failure. I felt guilty because I wasn’t in parental ecstasy every hour of every day and I wasn’t MAKING THE MOST OF EVERY MOMENT like the mamas in the parenting magazines seemed to be doing. I felt guilty because honestly, I was tired and cranky and ready for the day to be over quite often. And because I knew that one day, I’d wake up and the kids would be gone, and I’d be the old lady in the grocery store with my hand over my heart. Would I be able to say I enjoyed every moment? No.
Clearly, Carpe Diem doesn’t work for me. I can’t even carpe fifteen minutes in a row, so a whole diem is out of the question.
Here’s what does work for me:
There are two different types of time. Chronos time is what we live in. It’s regular time. It’s one minute at a time, staring down the clock until bedtime time. It’s ten excruciating minutes in the Target line time, four screaming minutes in time-out time, two hours until Daddy gets home time. Chronos is the hard, slow-passing time we parents often live in.
Then there’s Kairos time. Kairos is God’s time. It’s time outside of time. It’s metaphysical time. Kairos is those magical moments in which time stands still. I have a few of those moments each day, and I cherish them.
Like when I actually stop what I’m doing and really look at Tish. I notice how perfectly smooth and brownish her skin is. I notice the curves of her teeny elf mouth and her almond brown eyes, and I breathe in her soft Tishy smell. In these moments, I see that her mouth is moving, but I can’t hear her because all I can think is: This is the first time I’ve really seen Tish all day, and my God—she is so beautiful. Kairos.
Or when I’m stuck in Chronos time in the grocery line and I’m haggard and angry at the slow checkout clerk. But then I look at my cart and I’m transported out of Chronos. I notice the piles of healthy food I’ll feed my children to grow their bodies and minds, and I remember that most of the world’s mamas would kill for this opportunity. This chance to stand in a grocery line with enough money to pay. And I just stare at my cart. At the abundance. The bounty. Thank you, God. Kairos.
Or when the kids finally fall asleep and I curl up in my cozy bed with my dog, Theo, asleep at my feet and and I listen to him breathing. And for a moment I think, How did a girl like me get so lucky? To go to bed each night surrounded by this breath, this love, this peace, this warmth? Kairos.
These Kairos moments leave as fast as they come, but I mark them. I say the word Kairos in my head each time I leave Chronos. And at the end of the day, I don’t remember exactly what my Kairos moments were, but I remember I had them. That makes the pain of the daily parenting climb worth it.
If I had a couple Kairos moments, I call the day a success.
Carpe a couple of Kairoses a day.
Good enough for me.”
So, all of you lovies parenting the little ones on the climbing side of the parenting mountain, on the climbing the hill of the rollercoaster so slowly, forget about carpeing the whole day. Our next right thing is going to be just find one kairos moment a day, right? Just one day that stops your breath, that stops your heart, that is beauty. And you call that a parenting success. And when life gets hard this week, don’t you forget: We can do hard things.